Robert Rooderkerk, Sander de Leeuw, Alexander Hübner
{"title":"推进全渠道零售的营销-运营界面","authors":"Robert Rooderkerk, Sander de Leeuw, Alexander Hübner","doi":"10.1002/joom.1241","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Omnichannel retail has experienced enormous growth in the last decade, becoming the new normal for many consumer products (McKinsey & Company, <span>2021</span>). Many retailers have moved from being either pure bricks-and-mortar or online-only to serving customers across channels. For example, traditional retailers such as Walmart and Best Buy have opened e-commerce channels. Conversely, online-first retailers and vertically integrated brands like Amazon and Nike have added physical stores to their e-commerce channels (Avery et al., <span>2012</span>). In contrast to multichannel retail where channels coexist without any coordination, omnichannel retail combines expansion into different channels with coordination and integration to facilitate seamless customer journeys (Akturk et al., <span>2018</span>; Bijmolt et al., <span>2021</span>; Hübner et al., <span>2016</span>; Rooderkerk & Kök, <span>2019</span>; Verhoef et al., <span>2015</span>). To integrate their channels, retailers have adopted omnichannel fulfillment models such as “buy online pick up in-store” and “ship-from-store.” Channels have been (re)designed in terms of omnichannel customer journeys. To illustrate, digital vertical-native brands, such as Bonobos (men's wear) and Warby Parker (eyewear) employ “zero-inventory” showrooms where shoppers can inspect a product but not take it home. Such omnichannel fulfillment models combine the strengths of the different channels within a single customer journey: the store for physical inspection, and the online channel for convenient fulfillment.</p><p>Omnichannel retail aims at facilitating customer switching between channels across and within customer journeys. Achieving this requires retailers to carefully consider the challenges that customers experience in combining channels within a given customer journey. This includes difficulty in accessing online information from within the store, or in obtaining reliable information as to whether a product found online is available for inspection in a given store (Rooderkerk & Kök, <span>2019</span>). The friction created from traversing channels within a given customer-journey stage<sup>1</sup> or between two consecutive stages is reduced through information technology and a variety of omnichannel fulfillment solutions (see, e.g., Akturk et al., <span>2018</span>; Hübner et al., <span>2022</span>). Balancing the advantages of seamless omnichannel integration with the cost of seamlessness represents a standard operations management (OM) trade-off exercise. Trading off effectiveness and efficiency must consider both the marketing and the operations perspective: Omnichannel fulfillment models that are effective with respect to measures like sales conversion and service quality may not appear to be efficient with respect to measures like fulfillment cost and lead time.</p><p>Following Browning (<span>2020</span>) we observe that the marketing-operations interface in omnichannel retail is manifest in several areas, such as developing and managing new technologies to support omnichannel retail, new product development in omnichannel retail (Gallino & Rooderkerk, <span>2020</span>), on-demand production in omnichannel settings (e.g., 3D printing), and leveraging omnichannel solutions for product support.</p><p>Customer behavior and fulfillment emerge as key areas of focus in this special issue, building around key decisions that arise from the interaction between marketing and operations when implementing and managing omnichannel retail.</p><p>Omnichannel consumer behavior and fulfillment models require retailers to involve both their operations and marketing functions in decision-making. Table 1 lists key decisions facing retailers concerning a specific type of omnichannel customer behavior and fulfillment, as well as the opportunities and threats that retailers should consider in making these decisions.</p><p>Section 2 made clear that understanding and mitigating the potential information barriers between online and offline channels are key to success in the omnichannel context. Ren et al. (<span>2023</span>), the first paper in this special issue, study the effect of sharing brick-and-mortar store product availability in an omnichannel context with consumers subject to asymmetric assortments. Using data related to housewares, toys, and apparel of a North-American retailer, they show that online sharing of offline product availability data increased overall sales, particularly from customers within the trading area of the store. They show that sharing this information shifted sales from the physical to the online channel. Consumers were observed to switch to the online channel when they became aware that local stores might not have the product in stock, with this shift to online accompanied by a slight increase in the return rate. This study shows the importance of jointly considering marketing and operations aspects of omnichannel initiatives, unveiling interesting (unintended) side-effects: Cross-channel product assortment transparency in omnichannel retail not only turns out to boost overall sales, but it also increases return rates because of customers migrating to the online channel.</p><p>To the extent that e-marketplaces such as Taobao and Amazon are part of omnichannel customer journeys, friction involved with the use of this channel type could result in substantial losses to retailers. However, the online-offline integration of platforms has received little attention so far. Addressing this gap, Fang et al. (<span>2023</span>) compare two fulfillment models that arise when, under competitive pressure, platforms decide to provide third-party sellers support for channel integration. In the first fulfillment model, the so-called (i) <i>informational</i> online-offline channel integration, the platform provides so-called “SAME” labels to signal that the identical product is also available at third-party sellers' sites. The second model, called (ii) <i>transactional</i> online-offline channel integration, constitutes the buy online, pickup in-store (at one of the third-party's physical sites) fulfillment. Using data from a Chinese B2C platform, Fang et al. (<span>2023</span>) show that offering (i) informational integration dampens a platform's sales growth while (ii) transactional integration has no significant effect on sales growth. They further reveal how these effects are moderated by the seller's inter-platform function usage. Platforms that feel competitive pressure to respond to third-party seller demands by developing cross-channel integration may reduce friction and channel cannibalization effectively by prioritizing a buy-online, pickup-in-store model.</p><p>Current omnichannel literature has relied heavily on analytical modeling to portray the mechanisms in omnichannel retail (e.g., Gao & Su, <span>2017</span>; Wu & Chen, <span>2022</span>), or on quasi-experimental work that analyzes the effect of channel expansion-integration and the introduction of omnichannel fulfillment models (e.g., Akturk et al., <span>2018</span>; Avery et al., <span>2012</span>; Fang et al., <span>2023</span>; Gallino & Moreno, <span>2014</span>; Ren et al., <span>2023</span>). This work has mainly been descriptive and sales-centric. Our special issue has sought to add empirical work to this important topic. The presentation of customer behavior and fulfillment models in Table 1 suggests that ample opportunities exist for both retailers and customers to gain an advantage from omnichannel fulfillment, and empirical research can lead to improved decision-making in this context. The growing availability of omnichannel systems and data encourages researchers to investigate the omnichannel marketing-operations interface. Key research areas include:</p>","PeriodicalId":51097,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Operations Management","volume":"69 2","pages":"188-196"},"PeriodicalIF":6.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-02-22","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/joom.1241","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Advancing the marketing-operations interface in omnichannel retail\",\"authors\":\"Robert Rooderkerk, Sander de Leeuw, Alexander Hübner\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/joom.1241\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Omnichannel retail has experienced enormous growth in the last decade, becoming the new normal for many consumer products (McKinsey & Company, <span>2021</span>). Many retailers have moved from being either pure bricks-and-mortar or online-only to serving customers across channels. For example, traditional retailers such as Walmart and Best Buy have opened e-commerce channels. Conversely, online-first retailers and vertically integrated brands like Amazon and Nike have added physical stores to their e-commerce channels (Avery et al., <span>2012</span>). In contrast to multichannel retail where channels coexist without any coordination, omnichannel retail combines expansion into different channels with coordination and integration to facilitate seamless customer journeys (Akturk et al., <span>2018</span>; Bijmolt et al., <span>2021</span>; Hübner et al., <span>2016</span>; Rooderkerk & Kök, <span>2019</span>; Verhoef et al., <span>2015</span>). To integrate their channels, retailers have adopted omnichannel fulfillment models such as “buy online pick up in-store” and “ship-from-store.” Channels have been (re)designed in terms of omnichannel customer journeys. To illustrate, digital vertical-native brands, such as Bonobos (men's wear) and Warby Parker (eyewear) employ “zero-inventory” showrooms where shoppers can inspect a product but not take it home. Such omnichannel fulfillment models combine the strengths of the different channels within a single customer journey: the store for physical inspection, and the online channel for convenient fulfillment.</p><p>Omnichannel retail aims at facilitating customer switching between channels across and within customer journeys. Achieving this requires retailers to carefully consider the challenges that customers experience in combining channels within a given customer journey. This includes difficulty in accessing online information from within the store, or in obtaining reliable information as to whether a product found online is available for inspection in a given store (Rooderkerk & Kök, <span>2019</span>). The friction created from traversing channels within a given customer-journey stage<sup>1</sup> or between two consecutive stages is reduced through information technology and a variety of omnichannel fulfillment solutions (see, e.g., Akturk et al., <span>2018</span>; Hübner et al., <span>2022</span>). Balancing the advantages of seamless omnichannel integration with the cost of seamlessness represents a standard operations management (OM) trade-off exercise. Trading off effectiveness and efficiency must consider both the marketing and the operations perspective: Omnichannel fulfillment models that are effective with respect to measures like sales conversion and service quality may not appear to be efficient with respect to measures like fulfillment cost and lead time.</p><p>Following Browning (<span>2020</span>) we observe that the marketing-operations interface in omnichannel retail is manifest in several areas, such as developing and managing new technologies to support omnichannel retail, new product development in omnichannel retail (Gallino & Rooderkerk, <span>2020</span>), on-demand production in omnichannel settings (e.g., 3D printing), and leveraging omnichannel solutions for product support.</p><p>Customer behavior and fulfillment emerge as key areas of focus in this special issue, building around key decisions that arise from the interaction between marketing and operations when implementing and managing omnichannel retail.</p><p>Omnichannel consumer behavior and fulfillment models require retailers to involve both their operations and marketing functions in decision-making. Table 1 lists key decisions facing retailers concerning a specific type of omnichannel customer behavior and fulfillment, as well as the opportunities and threats that retailers should consider in making these decisions.</p><p>Section 2 made clear that understanding and mitigating the potential information barriers between online and offline channels are key to success in the omnichannel context. Ren et al. (<span>2023</span>), the first paper in this special issue, study the effect of sharing brick-and-mortar store product availability in an omnichannel context with consumers subject to asymmetric assortments. Using data related to housewares, toys, and apparel of a North-American retailer, they show that online sharing of offline product availability data increased overall sales, particularly from customers within the trading area of the store. They show that sharing this information shifted sales from the physical to the online channel. Consumers were observed to switch to the online channel when they became aware that local stores might not have the product in stock, with this shift to online accompanied by a slight increase in the return rate. This study shows the importance of jointly considering marketing and operations aspects of omnichannel initiatives, unveiling interesting (unintended) side-effects: Cross-channel product assortment transparency in omnichannel retail not only turns out to boost overall sales, but it also increases return rates because of customers migrating to the online channel.</p><p>To the extent that e-marketplaces such as Taobao and Amazon are part of omnichannel customer journeys, friction involved with the use of this channel type could result in substantial losses to retailers. However, the online-offline integration of platforms has received little attention so far. Addressing this gap, Fang et al. (<span>2023</span>) compare two fulfillment models that arise when, under competitive pressure, platforms decide to provide third-party sellers support for channel integration. In the first fulfillment model, the so-called (i) <i>informational</i> online-offline channel integration, the platform provides so-called “SAME” labels to signal that the identical product is also available at third-party sellers' sites. The second model, called (ii) <i>transactional</i> online-offline channel integration, constitutes the buy online, pickup in-store (at one of the third-party's physical sites) fulfillment. Using data from a Chinese B2C platform, Fang et al. (<span>2023</span>) show that offering (i) informational integration dampens a platform's sales growth while (ii) transactional integration has no significant effect on sales growth. They further reveal how these effects are moderated by the seller's inter-platform function usage. Platforms that feel competitive pressure to respond to third-party seller demands by developing cross-channel integration may reduce friction and channel cannibalization effectively by prioritizing a buy-online, pickup-in-store model.</p><p>Current omnichannel literature has relied heavily on analytical modeling to portray the mechanisms in omnichannel retail (e.g., Gao & Su, <span>2017</span>; Wu & Chen, <span>2022</span>), or on quasi-experimental work that analyzes the effect of channel expansion-integration and the introduction of omnichannel fulfillment models (e.g., Akturk et al., <span>2018</span>; Avery et al., <span>2012</span>; Fang et al., <span>2023</span>; Gallino & Moreno, <span>2014</span>; Ren et al., <span>2023</span>). This work has mainly been descriptive and sales-centric. Our special issue has sought to add empirical work to this important topic. The presentation of customer behavior and fulfillment models in Table 1 suggests that ample opportunities exist for both retailers and customers to gain an advantage from omnichannel fulfillment, and empirical research can lead to improved decision-making in this context. The growing availability of omnichannel systems and data encourages researchers to investigate the omnichannel marketing-operations interface. 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引用次数: 2
摘要
这项研究显示了联合考虑全渠道计划的营销和运营方面的重要性,揭示了有趣的(意想不到的)副作用:全渠道零售中的跨渠道产品分类透明度不仅可以促进整体销售,而且还可以提高退货率,因为客户迁移到在线渠道。在某种程度上,像淘宝和亚马逊这样的电子市场是全渠道客户旅程的一部分,使用这种渠道类型所涉及的摩擦可能会给零售商带来巨大损失。然而,迄今为止,平台的线上线下整合很少受到关注。为了解决这一差距,Fang等人(2023)比较了在竞争压力下,平台决定为渠道整合提供第三方卖家支持时出现的两种履行模式。在第一种履行模式中,即所谓的(i)信息线上线下渠道整合,平台提供所谓的“SAME”标签,表明在第三方卖家的网站上也可以买到相同的产品。第二种模式,称为(ii)事务性线上线下渠道整合,构成了在线购买,店内取货(在第三方实体站点之一)的实现。Fang等人(2023)利用中国B2C平台的数据表明,提供(i)信息整合抑制了平台的销售增长,而(ii)交易整合对销售增长没有显著影响。他们进一步揭示了这些影响是如何被卖家的平台间功能使用所缓和的。感受到竞争压力的平台通过开发跨渠道整合来响应第三方卖家的需求,可以通过优先考虑在线购买,店内提货的模式来有效减少摩擦和渠道蚕食。目前的全渠道文献在很大程度上依赖于分析模型来描述全渠道零售的机制(例如,Gao &;苏,2017;吴,Chen, 2022),或者分析渠道扩张整合效应和引入全渠道履行模型的准实验工作(例如,Akturk等人,2018;Avery et al., 2012;Fang et al., 2023;Gallino,莫雷诺,2014;Ren et al., 2023)。这项工作主要是描述性的和以销售为中心的。我们的特刊试图为这一重要主题增加实证工作。表1中客户行为和履行模型的呈现表明,零售商和客户都有充分的机会从全渠道履行中获得优势,实证研究可以在这种情况下改善决策。全渠道系统和数据的日益可用性鼓励研究人员调查全渠道营销-运营界面。重点研究领域包括:
Advancing the marketing-operations interface in omnichannel retail
Omnichannel retail has experienced enormous growth in the last decade, becoming the new normal for many consumer products (McKinsey & Company, 2021). Many retailers have moved from being either pure bricks-and-mortar or online-only to serving customers across channels. For example, traditional retailers such as Walmart and Best Buy have opened e-commerce channels. Conversely, online-first retailers and vertically integrated brands like Amazon and Nike have added physical stores to their e-commerce channels (Avery et al., 2012). In contrast to multichannel retail where channels coexist without any coordination, omnichannel retail combines expansion into different channels with coordination and integration to facilitate seamless customer journeys (Akturk et al., 2018; Bijmolt et al., 2021; Hübner et al., 2016; Rooderkerk & Kök, 2019; Verhoef et al., 2015). To integrate their channels, retailers have adopted omnichannel fulfillment models such as “buy online pick up in-store” and “ship-from-store.” Channels have been (re)designed in terms of omnichannel customer journeys. To illustrate, digital vertical-native brands, such as Bonobos (men's wear) and Warby Parker (eyewear) employ “zero-inventory” showrooms where shoppers can inspect a product but not take it home. Such omnichannel fulfillment models combine the strengths of the different channels within a single customer journey: the store for physical inspection, and the online channel for convenient fulfillment.
Omnichannel retail aims at facilitating customer switching between channels across and within customer journeys. Achieving this requires retailers to carefully consider the challenges that customers experience in combining channels within a given customer journey. This includes difficulty in accessing online information from within the store, or in obtaining reliable information as to whether a product found online is available for inspection in a given store (Rooderkerk & Kök, 2019). The friction created from traversing channels within a given customer-journey stage1 or between two consecutive stages is reduced through information technology and a variety of omnichannel fulfillment solutions (see, e.g., Akturk et al., 2018; Hübner et al., 2022). Balancing the advantages of seamless omnichannel integration with the cost of seamlessness represents a standard operations management (OM) trade-off exercise. Trading off effectiveness and efficiency must consider both the marketing and the operations perspective: Omnichannel fulfillment models that are effective with respect to measures like sales conversion and service quality may not appear to be efficient with respect to measures like fulfillment cost and lead time.
Following Browning (2020) we observe that the marketing-operations interface in omnichannel retail is manifest in several areas, such as developing and managing new technologies to support omnichannel retail, new product development in omnichannel retail (Gallino & Rooderkerk, 2020), on-demand production in omnichannel settings (e.g., 3D printing), and leveraging omnichannel solutions for product support.
Customer behavior and fulfillment emerge as key areas of focus in this special issue, building around key decisions that arise from the interaction between marketing and operations when implementing and managing omnichannel retail.
Omnichannel consumer behavior and fulfillment models require retailers to involve both their operations and marketing functions in decision-making. Table 1 lists key decisions facing retailers concerning a specific type of omnichannel customer behavior and fulfillment, as well as the opportunities and threats that retailers should consider in making these decisions.
Section 2 made clear that understanding and mitigating the potential information barriers between online and offline channels are key to success in the omnichannel context. Ren et al. (2023), the first paper in this special issue, study the effect of sharing brick-and-mortar store product availability in an omnichannel context with consumers subject to asymmetric assortments. Using data related to housewares, toys, and apparel of a North-American retailer, they show that online sharing of offline product availability data increased overall sales, particularly from customers within the trading area of the store. They show that sharing this information shifted sales from the physical to the online channel. Consumers were observed to switch to the online channel when they became aware that local stores might not have the product in stock, with this shift to online accompanied by a slight increase in the return rate. This study shows the importance of jointly considering marketing and operations aspects of omnichannel initiatives, unveiling interesting (unintended) side-effects: Cross-channel product assortment transparency in omnichannel retail not only turns out to boost overall sales, but it also increases return rates because of customers migrating to the online channel.
To the extent that e-marketplaces such as Taobao and Amazon are part of omnichannel customer journeys, friction involved with the use of this channel type could result in substantial losses to retailers. However, the online-offline integration of platforms has received little attention so far. Addressing this gap, Fang et al. (2023) compare two fulfillment models that arise when, under competitive pressure, platforms decide to provide third-party sellers support for channel integration. In the first fulfillment model, the so-called (i) informational online-offline channel integration, the platform provides so-called “SAME” labels to signal that the identical product is also available at third-party sellers' sites. The second model, called (ii) transactional online-offline channel integration, constitutes the buy online, pickup in-store (at one of the third-party's physical sites) fulfillment. Using data from a Chinese B2C platform, Fang et al. (2023) show that offering (i) informational integration dampens a platform's sales growth while (ii) transactional integration has no significant effect on sales growth. They further reveal how these effects are moderated by the seller's inter-platform function usage. Platforms that feel competitive pressure to respond to third-party seller demands by developing cross-channel integration may reduce friction and channel cannibalization effectively by prioritizing a buy-online, pickup-in-store model.
Current omnichannel literature has relied heavily on analytical modeling to portray the mechanisms in omnichannel retail (e.g., Gao & Su, 2017; Wu & Chen, 2022), or on quasi-experimental work that analyzes the effect of channel expansion-integration and the introduction of omnichannel fulfillment models (e.g., Akturk et al., 2018; Avery et al., 2012; Fang et al., 2023; Gallino & Moreno, 2014; Ren et al., 2023). This work has mainly been descriptive and sales-centric. Our special issue has sought to add empirical work to this important topic. The presentation of customer behavior and fulfillment models in Table 1 suggests that ample opportunities exist for both retailers and customers to gain an advantage from omnichannel fulfillment, and empirical research can lead to improved decision-making in this context. The growing availability of omnichannel systems and data encourages researchers to investigate the omnichannel marketing-operations interface. Key research areas include:
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Operations Management (JOM) is a leading academic publication dedicated to advancing the field of operations management (OM) through rigorous and original research. The journal's primary audience is the academic community, although it also values contributions that attract the interest of practitioners. However, it does not publish articles that are primarily aimed at practitioners, as academic relevance is a fundamental requirement.
JOM focuses on the management aspects of various types of operations, including manufacturing, service, and supply chain operations. The journal's scope is broad, covering both profit-oriented and non-profit organizations. The core criterion for publication is that the research question must be centered around operations management, rather than merely using operations as a context. For instance, a study on charismatic leadership in a manufacturing setting would only be within JOM's scope if it directly relates to the management of operations; the mere setting of the study is not enough.
Published papers in JOM are expected to address real-world operational questions and challenges. While not all research must be driven by practical concerns, there must be a credible link to practice that is considered from the outset of the research, not as an afterthought. Authors are cautioned against assuming that academic knowledge can be easily translated into practical applications without proper justification.
JOM's articles are abstracted and indexed by several prestigious databases and services, including Engineering Information, Inc.; Executive Sciences Institute; INSPEC; International Abstracts in Operations Research; Cambridge Scientific Abstracts; SciSearch/Science Citation Index; CompuMath Citation Index; Current Contents/Engineering, Computing & Technology; Information Access Company; and Social Sciences Citation Index. This ensures that the journal's research is widely accessible and recognized within the academic and professional communities.